The PSXSDK is a free and open source software development kit that enables anyone with C programming knowledge to make programs and games for Sony's PlayStation console. Everything was either written from scratch or based on already available open source resources. It is thus free from any proprietary code and fully legal to use. The SDK is mostly geared towards a *nix environment, but is fully usable with emulation environments such as MSYS and Cygwin.

WAF-FLE is a console for ModSecurity. It allows modsec administrators to view and search events logged by mlogc or mlog2waffle. The dashboard shows a graphical view of events, and when combined with the powerful drill-down filter allows quick searching for relevant events. Events can be viewed in detail, whether sent by one or many sensors.

GPCSlots2 is a console/terminal text-based casino game. It includes five slot machines, three roulette games, and two dice games. Ther are eight market funds to virtually invest in. A progressive jackpot is added to by all machines. Status can be printed to HTML.

xsudo.sh is an X11 sudo wrapper. It is intended to do what gksudo and kdesudo do without their dependencies on GTK or Qt. It is written to be fully Bourne shell-compatible. Instead of GTK or Qt, the one big dependency is OpenSSH.

SMRadius is a high performance pre-forked RADIUS AAA server. It features a highly configurable backend engine supporting flexible data specifications. Its primary goal is to provide an extremely flexible authentication platform which may serve a large number of industries, including ISPs and WiSPs.

Policyd v2 (codenamed "cluebringer") is a multi-platform policy server for popular MTAs. This policy daemon is designed mostly for large scale mail hosting environments. The main goal is to implement as many spam combating and email compliance features as possible while at the same time maintaining portability, stability, and performance. Its features include detailed policy and group specification, access control, helo/ehlo checks (helo randomization prevention and RFC compliance), SPF checks, Greylisting, Quotas, and Amavisd-new integration.

ssh-ident allows you to have a single line in your .bashrc, then let it take care of loading ssh-agents when first needed, load all the necessary keys, and share ssh-agents across login consoles. If you have multiple identities for the same account, it is able to load different keys depending on the host you connect to or the path you are working from. At the same time, it keeps the ssh-agents separated and forwards only the keys which are needed for the specific host. It also allows you to specify ssh-add options, so you can automatically lock keys which are unused for a certain time, or have a confirmation request every time a specific key is used.